From its earliest days, privatization was described as a ‘policy in search of a rationale’. Actually the problem was not so much the absence of a rationale as the presence of too many. As with the war in Iraq, different players in the policy process supported privatization for different reasons, and expected different outcomes.

Sometimes it was a simple matter of class politics. Privatization is bad for unions, which tend to be stronger and more effective in the public sector. It is usually good for the incumbent senior managers of privatized firms, who move from being relatively modestly paid public sector employees, constrained by bureaucratic rules and accountability, to doing much the same job but with greatly increased pay and privileges, and far fewer constraints. It is always good for the financial sector, which earns billions in fees for managing asset sales, not to mention the returns from advising the bidders, and the pure profits gained in common cases where the asset is underpriced and can be quickly resold at a much higher market value. For politicians eager to bash unions, and politically beholden to the financial sector this was a great deal. Hostility to unions was strong on the political right, particularly after the upsurge in strikes and militancy in the 1970s.

Governments mostly thought about privatization as a way of fixing problems of public finance. Government ministers short of money to pursue pet projects, to finance tax cuts, or simply to deal with growing budget deficits saw the sale of valuable assets as an easy and politically costless source of cash. The question of what would be done when there were no more assets to sell was left for another day.

In other cases, faced with the need to spend money modernizing infrastructure, but unwilling to take the necessary steps to pay for it, by raising taxes and charges or by adding to public debt, governments used privatization as a way of shifting the problem to the private sector. The privatization of the water supply industry by the British government, in response to pressure from the European Union to improve environmental health and safety is one well known response.

Economists, at least when they were thinking clearly and speaking honestly, were as one in rejecting the most popular political reasons for privatization: that is was a source of cash for governments, or a way of financing desired public investments without incurring public debt.

On the first point, it is a basic principal of economics that the value of capital asset is determined by the flow of earnings or services it generates. So the cash gained from selling public assets comes with the cost of forgoing the earnings it would have generated in continued public ownership. In a world where both governments and markets were perfectly efficient the cost would be exactly equal to the benefit and privatization would not change anything. As we’ll see below, things are more complicated than that. But that doesn’t make the idea that selling assets is a source of free cash any less silly.

A more sophisticated version of the same error is to suppose that governments facing debt constraints that restrict investment in desirable projects can get around those constraints by bringing in private investors. Once again, the problem is that the returns (such as proceeds from toll roads) needed to attract private investors represent money that could have been used to service public debt. So, the more private money is used to finance public infrastructure, the smaller the amount governments can invest without running into problems. As the exasperated secretaries of Australian state treasuries once put it, privatization and public private partnerships create no new ‘pot of money’ to spend on public infrastructure.

Privatization will yield net fiscal benefits to governments only if the price for which the asset is sold exceeds its value in continued public ownership. This value depends on the flow of future earnings that the asset can be expected to generate. The question of how to determine this value remains controversial, and will be discussed later, in relation to the equity premium puzzle.

Because claims about the fiscal benefits of privatization so commonly involved confused or fallacious arguments, most economists generally to focus on the potential benefits of privatization in promoting competition. Although extreme market liberals gave unconditional support to privatization, the majority of economists favored breaking up public enterprises and stripping them of monopoly privileges before privatization. However, since such measures inevitably reduced sale prices, and the opportunities for incumbent managers to enrich themselves, they were rejected in many cases. Going beyond such structural changes, economists emphasized the importance of governance as opposed to ownership.

The dominant view was that, given appropriate regulation and pro-competitive policies, it should not matter whether enterprises were publicly or privately owned. Hence, assuming private firms were more efficiently run, this view suggested that privatization should always be the preferred policy, provided that opportunities for competition were not compromised in the process.

A variety of rationales for privatization were put forward by a variety of political actors. But more and more, privatization was driven by the power of the financial sector, which benefits both directly and indirectly from privatization. The direct benefits include the massive fees and bonuses derived from managing privatizations. The indirect benefits include the enhanced economic and political power of the financial sector in an economy where all major investment decisions are driven by the demands of financial markets. In the era of market liberalism, this power extended over all major political parties.As US Senator Dick Durbin said “the banksare still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place,””. He could equally well have been talking about the City of London and its dominance of British politics. The situation in other developed countries was rapidly becoming similar. In Australia, for example, it has become routine for retired politicians to be offered cushy jobs in the financial sector, provided of course that they have followed the right kinds of policies when in office.

The competing rationales for privatization share one common thread. This is the belief that there is always a net social benefit to be realized from converting a publicly owned enterprise into a private firm. Some advocates of privatization (including many politicians) hope that this benefit will take the form of an improvement in the net worth of the public sector, others (including economists) that it will mean lower prices for consumers, and yet others (notably including the financial sector) that they can appropriate the gains for themselves. But this disagreement over who should benefit masks a shared assumption that there are net benefits to be fought over.

The claim that privatization always yields net social benefits was not always made explicit, but it was implicitly taken as common ground in most of the discussion of economic reform during the era of market liberalism. It is important, then, to understand what this claim entails.

Markets, governments and efficiency

When all the spurious arguments for privatization are stripped away, the central implication of the ideology of privatization is the claim that an economy in which all major decisions on investment, employment and production are left to private firms will outperform a mixed economy where governments play a significant role in such decisions. In particular, provided private firms are free to compete on a ‘level playing field’, they will always have a higher value than they would have under public ownership.

If the efficient markets hypothesis represents the negative side of the market liberal case, implying that no alternative institution can outperform markets, the case for privatization represents the positive side, implying that more private ownership will always improve economic outcomes.The market liberal ideology of privatization asserts that, private firms can outperform governments in the production of goods and services of all kinds, including those that have long been funded and provided by the public sector, such as school education. This assertion includes both a short-run component, based on the claim that private enterprises will operate more efficiently than theirpublicly owned counterparts and a long run component based on claims that privatization will improve investment decisions.

The short run claim is that, because of the incentives associated with private ownership, private enterprises are always more efficient than comparable public firms. Broadly speaking, this claim is true to the extent that profitability is a good guide to efficiency, which in turn depends largely on the absence of significant market failures. Private firms are controlled by their managers who may or may not be accountable to outside shareholders. In general, both managers and shareholders benefit significantly from increased profitability, though the relationship is more direct for shareholders.

By contrast, public enterprises are accountable to governments and therefore, indirectly to any group to which governments respond. In the presence of market failure, such accountability is likely to be beneficial, since government enterprises are under more pressure to promote better social outcomes, even at the expense of profitability. On the other hand where market failure is unimportant, requirements for accountability are likely to impede efficient decision-making. And, as public choice theorists pointed out in the 1970s, accountability requirements may be used by special interest groups to demand favorable treatment, such as above-market wages for unionized workers, or better service for politically influential customers.

The long-run case for privatization is based on the idea that the allocation of investment will be better undertaken by private firms than by government business enterprises. This claim in turn relies on the assumption that the evaluation of risk and returns undertaken by investment banks, with the assistance of ratings agencies, and the availability of sophisticated markets for derivatives like CDOs will be far superior than anything that could be obtained by, for example, using engineering calculations of the need for investment in various kinds of infrastructure, and seeking to implement the resulting investment plans on a co-ordinated basis. The GFC has shown that, for most of the past decade, market estimates of the relative riskiness and return of alternative investments have been entirely unrelated to related.

Failure

The turning of the tide against privatization predated the financial crisis. Internationally, a number of major privatizations have been reversed. The UK government was forced to denationalize its rail network after the failure of the privately owned operator. In Australia, dissatisfaction with the privatized telecommunications monopoly has led the government to announce that it will get back into the telecommunications business by constructing a publicly-owned national broadband network. New Zealand, where market liberalism was implemented in a radical form in the 1980s and 1990s, renationalized its national airline in 2001 and its railways a couple of years later.And even relabeled as “choice”, Social Security privatization proved so politically unsaleable that it was abandoned early in Bush’s second term.

More striking still was the collapse, under scrutiny, of nearly all the main theoretical and political rationales for privatization. Some, such as the idea that selling assets provided instant cash for governments were recognized as nonsensical early on, but, like the bigger zombie ideas discussed in this book, keep on coming back. Other rationales such as the hope that privatization would produce competitive markets in industries thought to be natural monopolies have held up longer but have ultimately proved unfounded.

The crucial issue, however, is the claim that privatization always yields net social benefits and therefore that, other things equal the price for which a public asset can be sold will exceed its value in continued public ownership. This claim has never had much empirical support. Rather it has been taken on faith as a consequence of the efficient markets hypothesis. With that hypothesis discredited, it is possible to consider how the public might lose from privatization. To understand the issues it is necessary to take a brief look at one of the enduring puzzles of economics – the high rate of return demanded by investors in equity (company stock and its derivatives) relative to the much lower rate of interest on government bonds.

The equity premium puzzle

The equity premium puzzle is one of those problems that is easy to state in summary form, but hard to explain in the detail necessary to understand it, and impossible to resolve (at least within the ‘rules of the game’ as played by economists in recent decades). The existence of a large equity premium has profound implications for economic analysis of issues ranging from climate change to macroeconomic policy, but it is most directly relevant in relation to privatization, and so I will discuss it here.

The facts are simple and well known. Over very long periods, and in many different countries, investments in equity (that is, stocks and shares) have yielded much higher returns, in the long run, than investments in bonds. The annual rate of interest on US government bonds, adjusted for inflation, has averaged between one and two per cent over the period since the late 19th century. Over the same period, returns on stocks (dividends and capital gains) have averaged around eight per cent.

The difference between the two rates of return, about six percentage points, is called the equity premium. The existence of the equity premium is not, in itself, a puzzle. Stocks are riskier than bonds, and investors expect a higher rate of return to compensate for this risk. The problem is that the premium is much higher than would be expected on the basis of the standard economic model, referred to as the Consumption Based Capital Asset Pricing Model (CCAPM).

CCAPM starts with the observation that if financial markets are both complete and efficient, they will pool and spread all the individual risks1 faced by households and firms, in much the same way as a life insurance company pools the mortality risks of its group of clients. Once this process of pooling and spreading is completed, the riskiness of the ‘average’ investment portfolio should be equal to the riskiness of the economy as a whole, as measured by aggregate consumption.So, the risk premium for equity should be determined by the riskiness of aggregate consumption, which is determined by the cycle of boom and recession.

The problem is that when we look at economic fluctuations in this aggregated way, they don’t appear to be very important. A deep recession might produce negative growth of 3 per cent, compared to expected growth of 3 per cent in a normal year, while a powerful boom might produce growth of 6 per cent. But variations of 3 per cent one way or the other should not, on standard views about people’s risk attitudes, justify a significant risk premium.2 In the classic paper that first pointed out the puzzle, Rajnish Mehra and Edward Prescott suggested that if the standard CCAPM model applied, the equity risk premium should be no more than half a percentage point as opposed to the observed value of six percentage points. Either the model is in need of refinement, or the assumption of complete and efficient financial markets is badly wrong.

Unfortunately, in presenting the anomalously large risk premium as a ‘puzzle’ Mehra and Prescott encouraged subsequent writers in the literature to search for clever explanations, rather than to consider the economic implications of the puzzle. Under the implied rules of the puzzle solving game, two kinds of explanation were allowed. The first kind were clever refinements of CCAPM, usually based on alternative assumptions about risk and time preferences, such complete and efficient financial markets generated large equity risk premiums. The second, reminiscent of Blanchard’s macroeconomic haikus (see Chapter …) involved introducing a market imperfection into the standard complete and efficient financial markets model, and showing that a large equity risk premium would result.

Although many solutions along these lines have been proposed, none has been generally accepted. The problem is the same as in the micro-based literature. Financial markets are incomplete and inefficient in many different ways, most of which have the effect of making investments in the stock market riskier than they would be in the ideal world assumed in CCAPM. The equity premium is the outcome of complex interactions between investors who cannot insulate themselves from personal and business risks generated by the economy, must deal with banks who are sometimes willing to lend to them and sometimes not, and cannot easily formexpectations about the value of shares. It is unsurprising that they are unwilling to invest in the absence of an assurance of high long run returns.

What matters is not solving the ‘puzzle’ but understanding its implications. In a paper with Simon Grant, I have described some of the most important, as follows

* That the macroeconomic variability associated with recessions is very expensive

* That risk to corporate profits robs the stock market of most of its value

* That corporate executives are under irresistible pressure to make short-sighted, myopic decisions

* That policies—disinflation, costly reform—that promise long-term gains at the expense of short-term pain are much less attractive if their benefits are risky

* That social insurance programs might well benefit from investing their resources in risky portfolios in order to mobilize additional risk-bearing capacity

* That there is a strong case for public investment in long-term projects and corporations, and for policies to reduce the cost of risky capital

* That transaction taxes such as the Tobin tax could be beneficial

Privatization and the equity premium

In the case of privatization, the implications of the equity premium arise from the fact that governments can finance investments entirely by issuing bonds, with the guarantee of repayment based on their capacity to raise revenue from taxes. Private corporations must rely on a mixture of equity and debt with the result that, on average, their cost of capital is around 6 per cent, compared to around 2 per cent for governments. That is, investors value both a government bond returning a safe $2 each year at $100 and place exactly the same value on a typical investment in company bonds and stocks generating an an average of $6 a year.

This creates a problem for privatization, which can be illustrated by an example. Suppose a government business enterprise is generating earnings of $60 million each year. At an interest rate of 2 per cent, that’s enough to service the interest on $3 billion in public debt (2 per cent of $3 billion is $60 million). Now suppose that the government decides on privatization.they will want a return of 6 per cent. If potential buyers don’t see any opportunity to increase profits, they will only be willing to pay $1 billion (since 6 per cent of $1 billion is $60 million). So, if the government uses the sales proceeds to repay $1 billion in debt, saving $20 million a year in interest, it will need to find another $40 million a year to replace the lost earnings.

On the other hand, if private buyers expect that they can increase annual profits to, say $300 million, they will be willing to pay $5 billion for the enterprise. If the government uses the proceeds to repay debt the interest saving will be $100 million a year, yielding a net fiscal benefit of $40 million a year.

If increases in profitability arise from improvements in operating efficiency or from improvements in the value of goods and services provided to consumers, the net fiscal benefit is also a net benefit to society as a whole. On the other hand, if private owners increase profits by cutting wages or reducing the quality of customer services, then losses to workers and consumers need to be taken into account in any assessment of privatization.

In view of the popularity of privatization, and the frequency with which it has been recommended, it is striking that assessments of this kind have rarely been undertaken. Bodies like the International Monetary Fund, which noted in 2000 that there had been few studies of the question, apparently did not feel that the lack of any empirical evidence should qualify their recommendations in favor of privatization. The IMF points to the difficulty of choosing a ‘counterfactual’, that is, of saying what would have happened in the absence of privatization. However, this problem can by overcome either by taking a conservative projection of future earnings under continued public ownership or by examining cases where a proposal for privatization was put forward, with an estimated sale price, but the enterprise was not sold, and remained in public ownership.

What evidence there is comes mostly from developing countries and is decidedly mixed. There are certainly cases, such as that of the steel industry in Brazil where privatization turned loss-making and declining public enterprises into profitable and growing private corporations. On the other side of the ledger, there are cases like that of Russia where privatization was the occasion for wholesale looting, allowing self-described democratic ‘reformers’, not to mention their Western advisors3, to enrich themselves massively. Most cases fall between these two extremes, but the view that privatization is always, or even mostly, beneficial to governments is not supported by the evidence.

Evidence on the fiscal effects of privatization in developed market economies is even more limited, so I’ll cite my own work on Australia. Examining a number of actual privatizations, I found that the government made net fiscal gains in only two cases. In both cases, the sale took place in a bubble atmosphere, with the result that the buyers subsequently resold at a loss. Looking at cases where privatization was proposed, but did not go ahead, the returns to government under continued public ownership clearly exceeded the benefits they would have obtained from selling the assets. On balance, then there was a net social loss in most cases, and this was not offset by benefits to workers (who were mostly worse off) or consumers (who experienced gains on some measures and losses on others).

Budgetary effects

The claim that selling off income earning assets provides governments with extra money that can be spent on public services is based on a confusion between income and capital. It is the same reasoning that led householders to finance consumption by borrowing against the equity in their homes. In the short run, it can produce apparent benefits, but in the longer term using asset sales to finance current expenditure is a road to financial ruin.

The sale of assets to fund current expenditure and tax cuts was pioneered by the Thatcher government in the UK. By the late 1990s, Thatcher’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson was proudly announcing that the government had replaced the deficits it inherited with surpluses, and celebrated with tax cuts all round. But by the mid-1990s, with the economy having been through a serious slump and no more assets left to sell, the budget deficit hit new records, exceeding 6 per cent of GDP [http://www.archive.official-documents.co.uk/document/hmt/budget94/chp04.htm]. It was left to the “New Labour” government of Tony Blair to clean up the mess.

The correct basis for an analysis of the fiscal impact of privatization is a comparison between the price at which a public enterprise can be sold and the present value of the flow of earnings that would be generated by the enterprise under continued public ownership.4 This comparison may also be expressed in flow terms, as a comparison between annual earnings foregone through privatization and the interest savings arising when the proceeds of privatization are used to repay debt.

In most cases, the income foregone from privatization exceeds the interest saved, resulting in a net fiscal loss. An extreme example was the Thatcher government’s 1985 sale, by public float, of half of the public holding in British Telecom (BT), analyzed by Quiggin (1995). Net proceeds from the sale of the first 50 per cent of BT were about 3.65 billion pounds.

In 1984-85, BT had a gross operating surplus of about 3 billion pounds and interest liabilities of 0.5 billion pounds, implying a net post-tax profit of around 2 billion pounds, or 1 billion pounds for the 50 per share holding that was sold.The real bond rate at the time was around 5 per cent. Hence, the income flow fromBT could have serviced public debt of20 billion pounds. Thus, the British public incurred a loss of more then 15 billion pounds on this transaction.

The loss was partly due to deliberate underpricing. This was reflected in the fact that the share price nearly doubled on the first day of trading.However, even if the shares had been sold at market value, the loss (that is, the difference between the sale proceeds and the debt that could be serviced by BT earnings) would have been around 10 billion pounds. Quiggin (1995) presents a number of similar examples from Australia and New Zealand. Further evidence is presented by Walker and Walker (2000).

Only on rare occasions has the sale of public assets in sectors like telecommunications and electricity been profitable for governments. During the ‘dotcom’ mania, share prices were wildly inflated, to the point where sales of some public assets, particularly those related to the Internet and mobile telephony, were profitable. Similarly, during the deregulation of the early 1990s, US electric utilities pursued international expansion aggressively, paying high prices for assets that subsequently proved unjustified in commercial terms.For example, a number of Victorian electricity distribution and generation enterprises, were bought by US utilities and subsequently resold at markedly reduced prices. It is only in exceptional circumstances like this that the privatization of profitable government infrastructure enterprises, run on a commercial basis, is likely to improve the fiscal position of governments.

Fiscal losses from privatization occur primarily as a result of the equity premium, that is, the difference between the rate of return expected by investors in private equity and the rate of interest on government.5 Estimates of the equity premium vary from four to eight percentage points. For illustrative purposes, suppose that the real rate of interest on government bonds is four per cent and the real rate of return on equity is ten per cent, so that the equity premium is six percentage points.

Now consider the privatization of a publicly-owned firm. Suppose, that privatization will not change the profitability of the firm, and that the proceeds of the sale will be used to repay government debt. For concreteness, suppose the firm will earn 100 million pounds per year. Given a required rate of return of 8 per cent, the market value of the firm will be 1 billion pounds. When this sum is used to repay debt, bearing an interest rate of 4 per cent, the resulting saving in interest will be 40 million poundsper year. In net terms, the public is worse off by 60 million pounds per year.

Exactly the opposite calculation applies in relation to nationalization. If nationalized and privatized firms are equally profitable, governments can issue debt to finance nationalization, and receive profits more than sufficient to service the debt.

This argument does not depend on the relative size of governments and capital markets. The greater capacity of government to spread risk arises from the taxation power, which also facilitates borrowing and lending to smooth consumption over time.

Despite the evidence that privatization mostly makes governments worse off, it continues to be promoted as a solution to short-term financial difficulties. In my own home state of Queensland Australia, the state government has used a budgetary crisis to justify privatization. The publication of a statement by more than 20 of Australia’s leading economists (including some prominent supporters of privatization) pointing out that their rationale was entirely spurious has done nothing to deter them from pushing this bogus argument.

Some notable failures

The election of the Thatcher government, which signaled the rise of privatization as a central component of market liberalism, took place just over thirty years ago. In that time, there have been sufficiently many failures to give us a reasonable idea of when privatization is likely to work and when it is not. The following list of examples is selected to illustrate particularly problematic areas of privatization, as opposed to those where privatized firms fail as a result of bad luck or the failure of individual managers.

The privatization of railway systems has proved consistently problematic. In the United Kingdom, the last major privatization under the Conservative government of 1979-97 was that of the rail system which was divided into two parts. A single company Railtrack owned and managed the rail network itself, while a number of different companies, each responsible for a different region, ran the train services. A series of failures forced the Blair government to denationalize Railtrack in 2002. Dissatisfaction with the private train operators remains intense, and the biggest rail contract, the East Coast main line was renationalized in November 2009.The partially privatized London Underground was renationalized in 2008. New Zealand similarly renationalized its rail network in 2003, and train operations in 2008.

Privatization has been at best a mixed success in the telecommunications industry. In most cases, former public monopolies have remained dominant, with the result that the expected benefits of competition have been slow to emerge, while capital expenditure has focused on maintaining market dominance rather than on improving customer service. In Australia, the Rudd Labor government, elected in 2007 has announced plans for a new National Broadband Network which will, at least initially, be publicly owned.

Consistently poor outcomes have been observed where privatization has been extended to the core areas of the welfare state such as education, health, retirement income and criminal justice.

There was a major push towards privatization of the school system in the United States in the 1990s, led by the Edison Schools corporation, which rapidly became a stock market darling, running hundreds of schools in dozens of states. But Edison was unable to deliver on its promises. The company was delisted in 2003, and is now largely out of the school management business. Paradoxically, school privatization has been more successful in Sweden, where a voucher system was introduced in the 1990s. However, even with an effectively level playing field,only 10 per cent of students attend private schools and most of these are non-profit.

In the 1990s, New Zealand attempted to commercialize its public hospital system, turning hospitals into “Crown Health Enterprises”. The results were disastrous, including huge blowouts in debt and a drastic decline in the quality of service to patients. Following the election of the Clark Labour government in 1999, the reforms were abandoned, and the Crown Health Enterprises were folded back into District Health Boards, run by elected members. The US, where the private sector plays a larger role in health services than in any other developed country, spends substantially more on health but achieves notably poor outcome. The reforms introduced by the Obama Administration and the introduction of a pharmaceutical benefit scheme under the Bush Administration have not really addressed these problems.

Perhaps the most pernicious form of privatization has been the expansion of the role of private police, prisons and mercenary military forces. What evidence there is suggests that privatization of the use of state power yields no cost saving. It does, however, yield significant political benefits to the governments that undertake. First, it allows them to avoid political responsibility for improper, and even criminal, use of force. Immigration detention centers are one noteworthy example as are the activities of companies like Blackwater, whose operatives can kill with impunity, subject neither to military nor to civil justice.

Not all privatizations have failed. For example, while infrastructure systems as a whole have strong natural monopoly characteristics, it is often possible to separate competitive or potentially competitive components of the system, in which case privatization may be feasible. In the case of electricity supply, for example, electricity generation is more competitive than transmission and distribution, while the retail functions (billing, arranging connections and so on) are more competitive still).In such cases, partial privatizations

The most successful privatizations have been those of firms that never really belonged in the public sector, and particularly firms that have been rescued from imminent failure for social or political reasons. Rolls-Royce in the UK and General Motors in the US are notable examples. More generally, where a competitive market can be sustained and there is no special requirement for close regulation, privatization has commonly been successful.

Markets, competition and regulation

The ideology of privatization has some implications regarding regulation that appear, at least superficially, paradoxical. Privatization and deregulation arecommonly seen as going hand in hand (6. . Yet in practice, privatization has been accompanied by the creation of a vast range of new regulatory bodies, and expansion of the powers of many existing regulators. In the UK, the home of privatization has seen the creation of a string of regulatory institutions such as OFTEL (Telecoms), OFWAT (Water), Ofgem (Gas and Electricity Markets), OFSTED (Education) and OPRA(Occupational Pensions Regulatory Authority) among many others. As well as these specific regulators, industry as a whole is subject to the Office of Fair Trading and the Competition Commission.

None of these bodies existed in any form in 1970 and all have gained greatly enhanced powers in the era of privatization. And membership of the European Union adds a whole new layer of regulation.

The apparent paradox reflects the fact that public ownership was introduced as a response to market failures, and privatization did not resolve these market failures. In particular, even in cases where public infrastructure enterprises were broken up prior to sale, substantial natural monopoly elements remained. The hopes of privatization advocates that regulation would be needed only temporarily, until robust competition emerged, have largely gone unfulfilled.

There are some benefits associated with the new model of regulation. Under traditional models of public ownership, infrastructure service providers were responsible for management of all aspects of their industry, including such questions as environmental protection and pricing as well as service provision. This did not always work well. Environmental concerns, in particular, were often given scant attention by engineering-dominated organizations. Pricing was driven primarily by requirements for cost recovery rather than by the need to use resources efficiently. In some cases, the creation of separate regulatory bodies has yielded improved outcomes. But privatization is not a necessary step in this progress.

The continued heavy reliance on regulation, and the conspicuous failure of ‘light-handed’ regulatory models such as those applied to electricity markets in the United States and telecommunications in New Zealand substantially undermines the view that public enterprises represent a barrier to the emergence of competitive markets capable of generating socially optimal outcomes. Public ownership is not the only answer to market failure, but, in the absence of strong regulation, privatization is not an answer at all.

What next ?

The failure of the case for comprehensive privatization does not imply acceptance of the opposite extreme position in favor of comprehensive public ownership, or that privatization is never justified. There are large areas of the economy, such as agriculture and retail trade, where public enterprises have rarely operated at a profit. No fiscal benefit can arise from public ownership of a loss-making enterprise. Relatively modest reductions in profitability arising from the constraints associated with public ownership are sufficient to offset the benefits of a lower cost of capital.

In particular, arguments about the cost of equity capital are irrelevant for small unincorporated businesses, where there is no reliance on external equity.Such small businesses typically face a high cost of external capital, relying primarily on bank loans. However, the higher cost of capital for small businesses, relative to both government enterprises and large private corporations, is offset by the efficiency advantages of combining ownership and control.

The idea that we must choose between pure laissez-faire capitalism and comprehensive socialization is part of what might be called the Great Forgetting of the lessons of the mixed economy. The mixed economy was not, and is not, a simple compromise between incompatible extremes. Rather it has given rise to an effective, and productive interaction between the private and public sectors. The balance of that interaction will change over time, sometimes requiring privatization of public enterprises and sometimes extension of the public sector through nationalization or the creation of new government business enterprises.

This is, perhaps, not a surprising conclusion, being little more than a restatement of the conventional wisdom that prevailed for much of the period after World War II. Nevertheless, it is inconsistent with the neoliberal ideas that have been dominant since the economic crisis of the 1970s. In the neoliberal framework, the superiority of the private sector and the persistence of large-scale public sector provision of goods and services is assumed to be the result of unjustified political resistance to market-oriented reform.

The mixed economy

Determining the right balance between the public and private sectors in a mixed economy does not require any radical innovations in economic thinking. The main task remaining for economists is to understand more fully the capital market failures that make the cost of equity capital so high. There are a number of factors involved, and the implications for the cost of equity capital depend on the interactions between them. First, as was discussed in Chapter 2, equity markets are subject to irrational bubbles and busts. The result is that equity investments fluctuate more than does the true economic value of the corporate profits from which returns to equity are derived. Since equity is riskier than it should be under the assumptions of CCAPM, investors will demand higher average rates of return. Second, many important risks, such as the risk of becoming unemployed, cannot be traded away, and this ‘background risk’ leads investors to be more averse to equity investments that yield low or negative returns in a downturn, when the risk of unemployment is high. Finally, equity markets have shown themselves to be uneven playing fields where large and politically powerful firms like Goldman Sachs are guaranteed high returns while ordinary investors lose out.

To the extent that these failures can be overcome, the equity premium will decline and the case for private provision of goods and services will be strengthened.7 In the meantime, economists need to abandon the search for a clever solution of the equity premium ‘puzzle’ andfocus more on the implications of the messy reality.

The existing theory of natural monopoly and market failure provides an indication of the areas where public ownership is likely to prove beneficial, as does the observation that, across many different countries, the areas of the economy that have been allocated to the private and public sectors have been broadly similar. The boundaries have shifted from time to time, but, broadly speaking, public provision has been most common in capital-intensive natural monopoly industries, and in the provision of human services such as health and education.

The case for public ownership is strongest inwhere market failure problems are likely to be severe. In the case of infrastructure industries, several market failures are important. First, because of the equity premium and the associated problem of short-termism, private providers of infrastructure may not invest enough, or in a way that maximizes long-run benefits. Second, infrastructure facilities often generate positive externalities that are not reflected in the returns to the owners of those facilities. For example, good quality transport facilities will raise the value of land in the areas it serves. Finally, there are problems associated with the natural monopoly characteristics of many infrastructure services.

As regards human services such as health and education, there is a large gap between the reality of providing these services and the theoretical requirements for market optimality is so great that economists have struggled to apply economic analysis to these activities. Among a wide range of difficulties, the biggest problems relate to information, uncertainty and financing.The value of health and education services is derived, in large measure from the knowledge of the providers (doctors, nurses, teachers and others) and their skill in applying that knowledge to benefit patients and students. By contrast, the standard economic analysis of markets begins with the presumption that both parties are equally well informed about the nature of the good or service involved. The asymmetry of information is intimately linked to the fact that the benefits of health and education services are hard to predict in advance, or even to verify in retrospect. This in turn creates severe problems financing through market mechanisms such as health insurance and student loans. One way or another, substantial government involvement in the financing of health and education is unavoidable. Once governments are paying some or all of the bill, the most cost-effective solution is often direct public provision.

Conversely, the case for private provision is strongest where the efficient scale of operations is small enough to allow a number of firms to compete and where markets function well, rewarding firms that innovate to anticipate and meet consumer demand, and eliminating those that produce inefficiently or provide poor service. In particular, in sectors of the economy dominated by small and medium enterprises, where large corporations cannot compete successfully, it is unlikely that government business enterprises will do much better. My home state of Queensland provides historical support for this claim, having experimented, unsuccessfully, with state-owned butcher shops, hotels and cattle stations early in the 20th century.

There will always be a range of intermediate cases where no solution is obviously superior. Depending on historical contingencies or particular circumstances, different societies may choose between public provision (typically by a commercialized government business enterprise), private provision subject to regulation, or perhaps some intermediate between the two, such as a public-private partnership.

Unlike most of the ideas discussed, the failure of the ideology of privatization has already been reflected in ‘facts on the ground’. Most of the emergency nationalizations undertaken during the crisis will ultimately be reversed. But the idea that public ownership is always a policy option, and sometimes a necessary choice, cannot easily be banished from public debate. The mixed economy is back, and it’s here to stay.

1The technical term is ‘idiosyncratic risk’.

2The logical implication, that recessions don’t really cause any economic damage, was derived by Robert E Lucas. Perhaps the singleminded devotion to theory required to push economic logic to such absurd conclusions is one of the characteristics needed to win a Nobel Prize!l

3In the most notable case, Harvard University paid $26 million to settle charges of self-dealing arising from the activities of its Russia Project, a team set up in the 1990s to promote privatization http://www.thenation.com/doc/19980601/wedel (

4 For a complete analysis of the welfare effects of privatization, it is necessary to take account of the effects of privatization on workers, consumers and the public at large. In most cases, privatization makes workers worse off. Effects on consumers are more mixed, but are rarely significant. It follows that, if governments are worse off in fiscal terms as a result of privatization, society as a whole is usually worse off as well.

5 Other factors, such as politically motivated underpricing are relevant in some cases, including that of British Telecom.

6they are items 8 and 9 in the list of 10 policy prescriptions in John Williamson’s original description of the ‘Washington consensus’

7The rise of the ‘information economy’ is a two-edged sword here. On the one hand, more information should improve the functioning of financial markets. On the other hand, information as an archetypal ‘public good’, suited to free public provision, so the areas of the economy where private markets yield the best outcomes are likely to contract in relative importance.

I remember Friedman in at least one sympathetic interview admitted that his policy prescriptions were driven by his concept of ‘freedom’, that although he used the sales argument that the market does it better and is more efficient, for him, whether this is correct or not is immaterial. (He did say that he thought it was correct though.) As far as he was concerned handing things over to the market was ‘freedom’ and anything else was not, with government being the antithesis. Hence, these policies, because they are superior in their pursuit of ‘freedom’, are the only ethical thing to do.

I think this view is held by many libertarian ‘thinkers’, and by many of the minority non-knuckle dragging caste of their followers. What is interesting is the arguments they use for a more public audience are quite different from what they say amongst the true believers. Clearly many of them (most) seem to think the great unwashed are not ready for the ‘high level’ stuff. Very cult like.

A problem is that as they mostly do not really argue on the basis of what they believe, but rather on whatever they believe will be expedient in convincing others to do what they want, they do not have their position tested (or examined) in these debates. As their public arguments are simply a means to their end, they are not really worried or dented if these arguments are convincingly refuted.

I remember also, in the Thatcher privatisation debates that the true believers thought that selling off public assets at much less than their real market value was a positive virtue because it increased the likelihood that ‘government’ would ever be able to bring them back into the public fold again.

Remember, I think it was in The Power to Tax (Buchanan and Brennan), that it was suggestted that the ‘constitution’ should be drafted so that ‘government’ could only use very inefficient taxing instruments so that ‘government’ would be constrained from doing anything.

These fellows believe in democracy – that is, in a constitution that embodies their choices regarding the make-up of society, and the ‘freedom’ for all to vote but without that vote being able to effect these ‘core’ policies and values.

I seem to remember, also, that they had the idea that voting in this set up could only succeed against the constitutional constrains when the voting was unanimous.

Remember also, that they (the libertarians) believe in process justice – that is, if the process is fair (and the market process is always fair) then the outcome, no matter who apparently inequitable or onerous, is by that virtue always fair.

What always amuses me is how the rail against ‘elites’ when they, themselves are very elitist, believing that only they should be able to decide how society is arranged and operated.

@Freelander
Imagine for a moment if we substituted the word jail for the word government in libertarian views. It always seemed to me the opposite of liberty is jail or incarceration. As libertarians would have it, the opposite of liberty is the government. Its really quite odd when you think about it. Governments and regulation hopefully mean fewer people end up in jail.

Libertarians tend to be all in favour of jails. They believe in strict enforcement of their rights – property rights; there are no others. The only things they believe government should spend money on are defense and justice. Justice is very important – courts to enforce their laws and property rights.

Last word in this sentence intended to be “reality”?
“The GFC has shown that, for most of the past decade, market estimates of the relative riskiness and return of alternative investments have been entirely unrelated to related.”

” the market process is always fair.”
I don’t know anyone of libertarian or neo-liberal leanings who would claim this. No two people have the same view of what is “fair”. A market is composed of dozens or thousands or millions of people deciding what is best for themselves. What to buy, what to sell, where to work. Not unrestricted choices of course but the freeer the market the wider the choices.
“Economic democracy” is not a bad name for it.
The alternative (and I accept it is not really either/or) using government to decide what is best for people is usually corrupted by special interest groups (including corporations) and what politicians need to do and say things to get elected.
“the opposite of liberty is the government”
Again i don’t know of anyone who believes this. What many do believe is that governments are the greatest threat to liberty because they have coercive powers that no-one else has.
Let’s take an example that we probably agree on. The US government’s outrageous action in sending people to countries where they will be interrogated and tortured. No company or private organisation could do this. Not even the mafia. Only a government.
The Bush government was an unusual government because normally the US has greater respect for liberties but other governments have done the same or worse.
Suspicion of government and its use of its power is a good everyday working rule.
That’s what makes me a libertarian

Ken N :” the market process is always fair.”I don’t know anyone of libertarian or neo-liberal leanings who would claim this. Again i don’t know of anyone who believes this. What many do believe is that governments are the greatest threat to liberty because they have coercive powers that no-one else has.Let’s take an example that we probably agree on. The US government’s outrageous action in sending people to countries where they will be interrogated and tortured. No company or private organisation could do this. Not even the mafia. Only a government.The Bush government was an unusual government because normally the US has greater respect for liberties but other governments have done the same or worse.Suspicion of government and its use of its power is a good everyday working rule.That’s what makes me a libertarian

Appeal to ignorance. You don’t know anyone who believes this…

It was libertarians and neo-cons who did this “sending people to countries …”.

More appeal to ignorance. “The Bush government was an unusual government because normally the US has greater respect for liberties but other governments have done the same or worse.” True, the bush government was the worst of US governments but the US, historically, has never been a great respecter of liberty, within their own shores and especially without. The Bush government was more overt in what it was up to as well as bing cack handed and heavy handed.

Coercive power is a property of power. The problem is power and the exercise of power. Terrorists blow people up because they do not have the greater power to go after what they want with greater subtlety. The Mafia would torture you at home because it has neither the resources or the need to move you to another country to do so.

Yes, F, and in most countries, governments are the strongest source of power.
That is why they need to be watched carefully and limited as much as feasible.
But I did not expect to convince anyone here of the importance of libertarian values because i know that most do not think they are important.
My purpose in joining the discussion was just to moderate some of the more over-the-top statements that had been made, two of which I quoted in my comment.

Where government is not a strong source of power things are almost always worse. Anarchy is not freedom. A great example is Iraq where people were, in general, better off with Saddam than they became with their ‘freedom’.

There should be limits on the exercise of power, and hence power. There should be effective governance over power and effective safeguards. Power always should be watched carefully.

None of this or these is especially or exclusively ‘libertarian’ or ‘libertarian values’ (‘libertarian values’ oxymoronic or not?). You won’t convince me because your argument is not convincing. Rather it is confused and callow.

1) Equity returns have a fat negative tail, (eg 1929, 1975, 2001 and 2008).
2) Bonds are more useful that equities as colleral (eg for options positions), and
3) equity holders have less volatile consumption that “savers”, leading to aggregation bias.

If you were to examine all the nationalizations of non-monopoly firms by the UK government from 1945-1979 (eg coal, steel, autos and aerospace) I would hazard I guess that you would find a negative return on the investment.

As for nationalizing natural monopolies, has any government ever, in the whole of human history, applied the first-best policy of marginal cost pricing?

Old fashioned nationalization is a 100% levereged investment in a non-diversified asset. A much better way for governments to cash in on the equities premium would be a soverign wealth fund, funded by selling off the RBA’s FX reserves (who needs them anyway) and investing in diversified equities (eg the ASX index).

Additionally, it is not appropriate to discount public investments at the risk free interest rate; the opportunity cost of capital in the private sector should be used, or it would generate underinvestment in the private sector and overinvestment in the public sector.

Actually, come to think of it, first best marginal cost pricing in unatainable (it relies on lump sum taxation). A more relevant question is wether any public monopoly anywhere has used second-best Ramsay pricing?

Actually, come to think of it, first best marginal cost pricing in unatainable (it relies on lump sum taxation). A more relevant question is wether any public monopoly anywhere has used second-best Ramsay pricing?

Also, I meant to say “2) Bonds are more useful that equities as colleteral”

Tim Peterson :In examining the equity premium, take into account the following:
…
Additionally, it is not appropriate to discount public investments at the risk free interest rate; the opportunity cost of capital in the private sector should be used, or it would generate underinvestment in the private sector and overinvestment in the public sector.

That the ‘real’ cost for government is that of the private sector interest rate is simply an unconvincing piece of neoliberal theology. If you worship the ‘free’ market then the borrowing advantage of government needs to be dismissed, if only with some unconvincing ritualistic sophistry.

The private sector rate is not the correct one, if only for the fact that the probability of the government defaulting, not because it has made wrong decisions and gone bankrupt, but because it has simply swindled the public and left town with the proceeds is not the same as probability that the management of a private entity have done that. But there are many other reasons as well…

I might add that it is not appropriate to discount public projects at the interest free rate is correct. But to dismiss the borrowing advantage of government (which is something different) is not correct.

This is only true if the pricing for a government entity needs to be augmented to completely cover costs and there is not an adequate source of revenue that does not impose efficiency costs other than ‘lump sum’ taxation.

One source of revenue that would enhance efficiency by removing a distortion, is, for example, a carbon tax or the sale of carbon permits.

@Ken N
Ken – you say “The alternative (and I accept it is not really either/or) using government to decide what is best for people is usually corrupted by special interest groups (including corporations) and what politicians need to do and say things to get elected.”

And corporations are somehow free of special interest groups, like executives and the boards, and the large funds managers – that may swap positions like chess pieces…

I fail to see any difference between the corruption of government organisations and the corruption of private organisations that goes on. You dont seem to see that corruption is not a function of the public sector alone and frankly, in most cases, were it not for the public sector, private sector corruptions would be far worse.

I dont fall for the libertarian view which ultimately is a piddlingly small extremist minority view…and as we speak and due to the GFC regulation is now increasing as it should be (but not fast enough).

Alice, I think you mean “decreasing” in your last sentence.
There is clearly nothing I could say to change your position so i won’t try.
As I said earlier, my original comment was not to change the mind of anyone here but just to moderate some of the more extreme statements made.

@Ken N
And there is nothing I could do to change yours or Tim Petersens view on the evils of the public sector where no such evils exist in any greater concentration than the private sector is there Ken? Even Smith noted that where two men or more men gather together …it usually involves a conspiracy to defraud the public and this is not an exact quote …but by the public he did not mean the public sector – just the ordinary customers.

You think corruption is a product of the private sector mixing with government Ken? Rubbish. Corruption is indifferent as to where it strikes or where it takes root and flourishes Ken. It can strikes where men (or women) gather together. Period. It strikes institutions, it strikes large institutions and it strikes small institutions. It strikes with indifference as to size or delineation of a public private divide. To think corruption is discerning in where it prefers to habituate (teh public sector or the private sector or both) is a fallacy of thought of monumental propertions.

You can remove the government and subject us all to a nasty ideological experiment (and lord we have had enough of nasty free market ideological experiments) and you will find corruption still very much alive and well.

The cost of government investment risk is spread across all investments (through the income tax increases that would happen if the public sectors investment yields less than expected) while the cost of private sector investment is localized (except for the “too big to fail” companies that ought to bhave left to their own devices in 2008).

On the latter, fiscal and monetary policy should have been used in place of the TARP (more bang for the buck and no moral harazard problems).

The GFC has shown that, for most of the past decade, market estimates of the relative riskiness and return of alternative investments have been entirely unrelated to related.

Entirely unrelated to related?

The UK government was forced to denationalize its rail network after the failure of the privately owned operator.

denationalize or renationalize?

Well anyway John, this is one of the best chapters, very good to have it explained clearly. Although, shouldn’t a 100 million pound perpetuity at an 8% discount rate give you a market value of 1.25 billion, not 1 billion?

There’s an unfinished sentence on electricity privatization, I hope you find space for Grandma Millie in there.

The most successful privatizations have been those of firms that never really belonged in the public sector, and particularly firms that have been rescued from imminent failure for social or political reasons. Rolls-Royce in the UK and General Motors in the US are notable examples.

General Motors? I think it’s a bit premature to call it a “successful privatization”. Last I heard GM was still majority owned by the Treasury and the IPO was due later this year.

The mixed economy is back, and it’s here to stay.

Tell that to Anna Bligh. It’s a bit too early to announce victory I think… And I don’t know if it belongs to the EMH chapter or what, but where does the world financial system sit on the spectrum from “private” to “public”? Pretty much publicly funded but privately controlled. Now if the private financial sector can manage a trillion (or whatever.. who’s counting?) in government bailouts without giving up ownership… well you could call that a “mixed economy” for sure, but probably not what you had in mind.

Well I want to have the non-defense government to have a half-life of about five years. But its the banking industry that we ought to want to take on first. Before developing a sort of government that ruthlessly culls old programs and departments, even if it sometimes starts new ones. We cannot hope to achieve anything without bringing this most belligerent of enemies to heel.

“Determining the right balance between the public and private sectors in a mixed economy does not require any radical innovations in economic thinking.”

I don’t know about that though. Thats where I would differ. I think we really do need to knuckle down and start looking at these problems from many different angles. I think we need an whole new language. A language of “trans-spatial” goods and services. A whole new way of thinking about property rights, that are specifically not freehold! property rights. Property rights that are strong and reliable but not freehold. I think we need to look at the justification and proper place of separate legal entities. We may need to look at private eminent domain at premium. Which hopefully would almost never be triggered, but would enable serious private planning of potential construction.

I think we need to bring back “market socialism” as a possibility for some components of infrastructure, in the medium term. While market socialism is clearly a failed idea for the economy entire, I think it is very appropriate for some aspects of infrastructure.

@Graeme Bird
On this comment when talking about the right balance between the public and private sectors in a mixed economy

“But its the banking industry that we ought to want to take on first. Before developing a sort of government that ruthlessly culls old programs and departments, even if it sometimes starts new ones. We cannot hope to achieve anything without bringing this most belligerent of enemies to heel.”

I couldnt agree more. I am deeply opposed to the deregulation and freedoms that have been accorded banking and financial institutions over the most recent decades and I am deeply opposed to the idea of massive global banks with massive resources operating in highlty interrelated structures in terms of individual executives and management staff and also in concentrated oligopolistic structures which have created the right conditions for corporate corruption on an unprecedented scale with government tacit complicity. To have permitted this to happen over time has proved disastrous and will again prove disastrous (with degree of severity rising).

It is a most belligerant enemy and our worst enemy for ongoing economic health.

However, Graeme – I disagree with the notion that we need to do more to enable serious private planning of potential construction in at least one area – essential infrastructures – transport springs immediately to mind and I will use it as an example at NSW State level.

There have been all sorts of concessions offered to “enable serious private planning for (transport) construction” in Sydney, over the most recent decades. Many have backfired… proved too expensive, offered only short sections, suffered lower revenues as people avoided them, failed to deal with emmissions from tunnels, damaged property in construction or were inadequately constructed and have proved costly in terms of contingent liabilities being called into action and expensed against the incompetent government who made excessively generous deals to get the job done.

Result? We likely paid more than we should have if the NSW State public sector had done the job itself (were it even still capable – which I doubt very much – seeing as the old NSW Dept of Public works is now an empty shell of its once mighty force of architects, engineers, employees and workers etc).

We are not getting on with what is really needed to remove cars from roads. That, in my opinion, is a massive development of a public transport system such as high speed rail and adequate access to it….even maintenance of existing transport systems in Sydney is not being done, and anyway, mere maintenance is not sufficient when the population has grown since the last time then NSW Dept of Public Works actually built anything (??) and clearly we have huge gridlock problems already on our roads (with all the emmissions problems those gridlocks create).

While the NSW State government tinkers with offering incentives to private operators..the results are dismal. Totally inadequate for future use. I cannot fathom the decision to invest in the new CBD metro for example. This is a ridiculous waste of money. It is a toy.

See comment 5 by “Resigned in Disgust (CBD metro)” in this Daily telegraph blog on the CBD metro.

You only have to stand at the existing Entertainment centre monorail station, to see this already existing monorail which circles a tiny part of the city and round to Darling harbour to see it travel round and round, past you, 95% empty all day long. Then you realise the CBD metro is nothing more. We now seem to have excessive toys servicing Rozelle, Balmain,and Lilyfield – now that just wouldnt happen to be for all the unit developers in those areas would it? Its easier to sell a matchbox of a unit in the inner west, if a train station is outside your front door. Keep the donations rolling in.

Its obvious there is neither sufficient private or sufficient public planning for construction in transport infrastructure needs going on in Sydney. “Creating the right conditions for serious private planning for construction” is just an excuse used by some governments to avoid any responsibility for serious public planning for current and future construction on transport infrastructures needed.

In the chapter on “The Great Moderation” you say :-’The architects of postwar reconstruction hoped to prevent a renewed slump like that of 1919, and to hold unemployment rates below 5 per cent. They succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.’

You seem to be mixing up the discount rate that government should use for the different projects it undertakes with the rate it can borrow at (which depend on assessments of risk). We know the rate it can borrow at because it is transparently clear. Government can borrow at a much lower rate than the private sector can. This is a horrible fact for market worshipers. Market worshipers have used all sorts of sophistry to try to make that fact disappear.

” I am deeply opposed to the deregulation and freedoms that have been accorded banking and financial institutions over the most recent decades ….”

Its not really been deregulation though has it? Its like a re-regulation in favour of incumbent banks. Whereas in the past at least, as misguided as most regulation was, the actual intention was to help the public. There are more cartelisation regulations then before. But they no longer require a reserve asset ratio. The most important regulation of all. So there was never a deregulation. There was instead a rigging of the situation to be further to the advantage of bigshot bankers.

Yes I see what you are saying about transport infrastructure. I think if you cannot set up a clearly non-cronyist and functioning market then keep it socialist. Only if you are sure you know what you are doing then you can sell it ……

…….. but then again why sell?

If you know what you are doing the private stuff ought to outgrow the public stuff without anything ever being sold. So where is the justification for selling in that scenario? So we probably aren’t disagreeing as much as it might seem on the surface of things. But you work towards a free enterprise market where you can. Because that way the burden of government is spread more thinly.

The idea I think with socialist projects is to have a policy of outsourcing to sole traders in the context that they and their crew can work tax free. The revenue they can get is tax free for the sole trader and his team doesn’t need to pay taxes on the wages earned on the socialist project. Skip the corporate sector. Cut them out of the process as much as possible. Then the socialist project becomes more of a co-ordinating affair. You’ll find that perhaps projects are slower under these circumstances. But cost over-runs ought to be less in the long run. And there are social benefits I believe, to promoting small business and cutting the big end of town out of the public largesse.

I think we take a leaf from DeWitt Clintons playbook. Rather than following Clintons of more recent ilk unless their first name is George.

Here is how they did things when it came to making the Eire Canal. Still one of the most unambiguously successful infrastructure projects in all of history:

“In keeping with the democratic reforms sweeping the country, the state government offered contracts for lengths of as little as one-quarter mile of ditch to allow as many people as possible to benefit from the project. Richardson contracted to build 61 chains and 50 links of canal, amounting to slightly more than three-quarters of a mile.

Building New York’s “Grand Canal,” as the Erie Canal often was called, involved excavating a ditch between the Hudson River at Albany and Lake Erie at Buffalo. The canal ditch was 363 miles long, 40 feet wide at the surface, 26 feet wide at the bottom, and 4 feet deep.”

Today they’d just get Macquarie bank to back the truck up and they’d load it with cash. “You know not to embarrass us! An election is coming soon” they’d say. And then the boss at Macquarie would pay himself 5000 dollars an hour.

Be fair though Freelander. People sometimes have to see the upshot of this story prior to rethinking the matter. Certainly I took a long time to come around. I wasn’t focusing on the issue very much.

I think he’s right ideally. I just don’t think, in restrospect, that stuff being sold to large consortiums, in these hateful deep pocket auctions, is any sort of way of effecting this ideal.

I don’t think you should be taking shots at Friedman, the great freedom warrior. Its the neoclassical boneheads who hide behind maybe 3 authentic geniuses in their school who are to blame here.

Its these neoclassical boneheads who coast on Friedman and others, to justify what we can now see as a hateful trashing of the publics (and the nations!) net capital position, and the distortion of the free enterprise side of the economy towards corporatism, cronyism, and the big end of town more generally….. its these people who are suspect.

Its not Friedman we ought to be upset about for this. Its the people who witnessed what happened in Russia and elsewhere and didn’t learn a damn thing from it. Who still to this day advocate these deep pocket auctions, that give birth to a frenzy of new debt, and a market that can never from then on be sound ….. its these people that will not learn that are to blame.

Friedman, Buchanan (and perhaps Stigler) were doing their best to fight the good fight in accordance with the realities of their day. Probably Friedman didn’t get around to thinking too hard about how this privatisation business would pan out in practice. Certainly I didn’t.